Doherty Institute - Research Publications

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    Combination Immune Checkpoint Blockade to Reverse HIV Latency
    Van der Sluis, RM ; Kumar, NA ; Pascoe, RD ; Zerbato, JM ; Evans, VA ; Dantanarayana, AI ; Anderson, JL ; Sekaly, RP ; Fromentin, R ; Chomont, N ; Cameron, PU ; Lewin, SR (AMER ASSOC IMMUNOLOGISTS, 2020-03-01)
    In people living with HIV on antiretroviral therapy, HIV latency is the major barrier to a cure. HIV persists preferentially in CD4+ T cells expressing multiple immune checkpoint (IC) molecules, including programmed death (PD)-1, T cell Ig and mucin domain-containing protein 3 (TIM-3), lymphocyte associated gene 3 (LAG-3), and T cell immunoreceptor with Ig and ITIM domains (TIGIT). We aimed to determine whether these and other IC molecules have a functional role in maintaining HIV latency and whether blocking IC molecules with Abs reverses HIV latency. Using an in vitro model that establishes latency in both nonproliferating and proliferating human CD4+ T cells, we show that proliferating cells express multiple IC molecules at high levels. Latent infection was enriched in proliferating cells expressing PD-1. In contrast, nonproliferating cells expressed IC molecules at significantly lower levels, but latent infection was enriched in cells expressing PD-1, TIM-3, CTL-associated protein 4 (CTLA-4), or B and T lymphocyte attenuator (BTLA). In the presence of an additional T cell-activating stimulus, staphylococcal enterotoxin B, Abs to CTLA-4 and PD-1 reversed HIV latency in proliferating and nonproliferating CD4+ T cells, respectively. In the absence of staphylococcal enterotoxin B, only the combination of Abs to PD-1, CTLA-4, TIM-3, and TIGIT reversed latency. The potency of latency reversal was significantly higher following combination IC blockade compared with other latency-reversing agents, including vorinostat and bryostatin. Combination IC blockade should be further explored as a strategy to reverse HIV latency.
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    Intrahepatic CXCL10 is strongly associated with liver fibrosis in HIV-Hepatitis B co-infection
    Singh, KP ; Zerbato, JM ; Zhao, W ; Braat, S ; Deleage, C ; Tennakoon, GS ; Mason, H ; Dantanarayana, A ; Rhodes, A ; Rhodes, JW ; Torresi, J ; Harman, AN ; Revill, PA ; Crane, M ; Estes, JD ; Avihingsanon, A ; Lewin, SR ; Audsley, J ; Douek, DC (PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE, 2020-09)
    In HIV-hepatitis B virus (HBV) co-infection, adverse liver outcomes including liver fibrosis occur at higher frequency than in HBV-mono-infection, even following antiretroviral therapy (ART) that suppresses both HIV and HBV replication. To determine whether liver disease was associated with intrahepatic or circulating markers of inflammation or burden of HIV or HBV, liver biopsies and blood were collected from HIV-HBV co-infected individuals (n = 39) living in Bangkok, Thailand and naïve to ART. Transient elastography (TE) was performed. Intrahepatic and circulating markers of inflammation and microbial translocation were quantified by ELISA and bead arrays and HIV and HBV infection quantified by PCR. Liver fibrosis (measured by both transient elastography and liver biopsy) was statistically significantly associated with intrahepatic mRNA for CXCL10 and CXCR3 using linear and logistic regression analyses adjusted for CD4 T-cell count. There was no evidence of a relationship between liver fibrosis and circulating HBV DNA, qHBsAg, plasma HIV RNA or circulating cell-associated HIV RNA or DNA. Using immunohistochemistry of liver biopsies from this cohort, intrahepatic CXCL10 was detected in hepatocytes associated with inflammatory liver infiltrates in the portal tracts. In an in vitro model, we infected an HBV-infected hepatocyte cell line with HIV, followed by interferon-γ stimulation. HBV-infected cells lines produced significantly more CXCL10 than uninfected cells lines and this significantly increased in the presence of an increasing multiplicity of HIV infection. Conclusion: Enhanced production of CXCL10 following co-infection of hepatocytes with both HIV and HBV may contribute to accelerated liver disease in the setting of HIV-HBV co-infection.
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    Diverse effects of interferon alpha on the establishment and reversal of HIV latency
    Van der Sluis, RM ; Zerbato, JM ; Rhodes, JW ; Pascoe, RD ; Solomon, A ; Kumar, NA ; Dantanarayana, AI ; Tennakoon, S ; Dufloo, J ; McMahon, J ; Chang, JJ ; Evans, VA ; Hertzog, PJ ; Jakobsen, MR ; Harman, AN ; Lewin, SR ; Cameron, PU ; Douek, DC (PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE, 2020-02)
    HIV latency is the major barrier to a cure for people living with HIV (PLWH) on antiretroviral therapy (ART) because the virus persists in long-lived non-proliferating and proliferating latently infected CD4+ T cells. Latently infected CD4+ T cells do not express viral proteins and are therefore not visible to immune mediated clearance. Therefore, identifying interventions that can reverse latency and also enhance immune mediated clearance is of high interest. Interferons (IFNs) have multiple immune enhancing effects and can inhibit HIV replication in activated CD4+ T cells. However, the effects of IFNs on the establishment and reversal of HIV latency is not understood. Using an in vitro model of latency, we demonstrated that plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDC) inhibit the establishment of HIV latency through secretion of type I IFNα, IFNβ and IFNω but not IFNε or type III IFNλ1 and IFNλ3. However, once latency was established, IFNα but no other IFNs were able to efficiently reverse latency in both an in vitro model of latency and CD4+ T cells collected from PLWH on suppressive ART. Binding of IFNα to its receptor expressed on primary CD4+ T cells did not induce activation of the canonical or non-canonical NFκB pathway but did induce phosphorylation of STAT1, 3 and 5 proteins. STAT5 has been previously demonstrated to bind to the HIV long terminal repeat and activate HIV transcription. We demonstrate diverse effects of interferons on HIV latency with type I IFNα; inhibiting the establishment of latency but also reversing HIV latency once latency is established.
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    Longitudinal analysis of subtype C envelope tropism for memory CD4+T cell subsets over the first 3 years of untreated HIV-1 infection
    Gartner, MJ ; Gorry, PR ; Tumpach, C ; Zhou, J ; Dantanarayana, A ; Chang, JJ ; Angelovich, TA ; Ellenberg, P ; Laumaea, AE ; Nonyane, M ; Moore, PL ; Lewin, SR ; Churchill, MJ ; Flynn, JK ; Roche, M (BMC, 2020-08-06)
    BACKGROUND: HIV-1 infects a wide range of CD4+ T cells with different phenotypic properties and differing expression levels of entry coreceptors. We sought to determine the viral tropism of subtype C (C-HIV) Envelope (Env) clones for different CD4+ T cell subsets and whether tropism changes during acute to chronic disease progression. HIV-1 envs were amplified from the plasma of five C-HIV infected women from three untreated time points; less than 2 months, 1-year and 3-years post-infection. Pseudoviruses were generated from Env clones, phenotyped for coreceptor usage and CD4+ T cell subset tropism was measured by flow cytometry. RESULTS: A total of 50 C-HIV envs were cloned and screened for functionality in pseudovirus infection assays. Phylogenetic and variable region characteristic analysis demonstrated evolution in envs between time points. We found 45 pseudoviruses were functional and all used CCR5 to mediate entry into NP2/CD4/CCR5 cells. In vitro infection assays showed transitional memory (TM) and effector memory (EM) CD4+ T cells were more frequently infected (median: 46% and 25% of total infected CD4+ T cells respectively) than naïve, stem cell memory, central memory and terminally differentiated cells. This was not due to these subsets contributing a higher proportion of the CD4+ T cell pool, rather these subsets were more susceptible to infection (median: 5.38% EM and 2.15% TM cells infected), consistent with heightened CCR5 expression on EM and TM cells. No inter- or intra-participant changes in CD4+ T cell subset tropism were observed across the three-time points. CONCLUSIONS: CD4+ T cell subsets that express more CCR5 were more susceptible to infection with C-HIV Envs, suggesting that these may be the major cellular targets during the first 3 years of infection. Moreover, we found that viral tropism for different CD4+ T cell subsets in vitro did not change between Envs cloned from acute to chronic disease stages. Finally, central memory, naïve and stem cell memory CD4+ T cell subsets were susceptible to infection, albeit inefficiently by Envs from all time-points, suggesting that direct infection of these cells may help establish the latent reservoir early in infection.
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    The effect of antiretroviral intensification with dolutegravir on residual virus replication in HIV-infected individuals: a randomised, placebo-controlled, double-blind trial
    Rasmussen, TA ; McMahon, JH ; Chang, JJ ; Audsley, J ; Rhodes, A ; Tennakoon, S ; Dantanarayana, A ; Spelman, T ; Schmidt, T ; Kent, SJ ; Morcilla, V ; Palmer, S ; Elliott, JH ; Lewin, SR (ELSEVIER INC, 2018-05)
    BACKGROUND: Whether ongoing virus replication occurs in HIV-infected individuals on antiretroviral therapy (ART) is unclear; therefore, whether residual virus replication is a barrier to achieving a cure for HIV is also unknown. We aimed to establish whether ART intensification with dolutegravir would reveal or affect residual virus replication in HIV-infected individuals on suppressive treatment. METHODS: In this randomised, placebo-controlled, double-blind trial, we enrolled HIV-infected adults (aged 18 years and older) receiving combination ART (at least three agents) for at least 3 years from the Alfred Hospital and Melbourne Sexual Health Centre, Melbourne, VIC, Australia. Eligible participants had fewer than 50 copies per mL HIV-1 plasma RNA for more than 3 years and fewer than 20 copies per mL at screening and two CD4 counts higher than 350 cells per μL in the previous 24 months including screening. Participants were randomly assigned (1:1) to receive 50 mg oral dolutegravir or placebo once a day for 56 days in addition to background ART. Follow-up was done at days 1, 3, 7, 14, 28, 56, and 84. The primary outcome was the change from baseline in frequency of 2-long terminal repeat (2-LTR) circles in peripheral blood CD4 cells at day 7. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT02500446. FINDINGS: Between Sept 21, 2015, and Sept 19, 2016, 46 individuals were screened for inclusion. 40 were eligible for inclusion and were randomly assigned to the dolutegravir (n=21) or placebo group (n=19). All enrolled participants completed the study procedures and no individuals were lost to follow up. All participants were on suppressive ART with 12% receiving protease inhibitors and the others non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors. Median 2-LTR circles fold-change from baseline to day 7 was -0·17 (IQR -0·90 to 0·90) in the dolutegravir group and -0·26 (-1·00 to 1·17) in the placebo group (p=0·17). The addition of dolutegravir to pre-existing ART regimens was safe and there were no treatment discontinuations or treatment-related serious adverse events. INTERPRETATION: Our findings show that in HIV-infected individuals on modern suppressive ART regimens, residual replication is rare, if at all present, and was not recorded in blood after dolutegravir intensification. Because tissue biopsies were not done we cannot exclude the possibility of residual virus replication in tissue. Strategies other than ART alone are needed to eliminate HIV persistence on treatment. FUNDING: ViiV Healthcare.
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    Cell-associated HIV RNA and the ratio of HIV RNA to DNA have circadian cycles in HIV-positive individuals on antiretoviral therapy
    Stern, J ; Roche, M ; Solomon, A ; Dantanarayana, A ; Reynaldi, A ; Davenport, MP ; Deeks, SG ; Hartogenesis, W ; Hecht, FM ; Cockerham, L ; Lewin, SR (JOHN WILEY & SONS LTD, 2019-07)